Text messages, emails and inspection reports raised issues Tuesday about whether all the exits were accessible and working the night of the Pulse nightclub shooting, but Orlando Fire officials insist that there were no fire code violations.

In a text message exchange sent hours after the mass shooting to Fire Chief Roderick Williams, Orlando Fire Marshal Tammy Hughes says she saw a photo by a code enforcement officer the day of the shooting that shows a soda machine blocking the exit door. She said "maybe one or two" exits were blocked. The date of the photo is not noted.

Hughes also sent an e-mail to Williams that same day, saying that the "last company officer exit check was conducted on 5/21/16 which did indicate that a door was inoperable. It is not clear which door it was."

But hours after the documents were released on Tuesday, the fire department and a Pulse attorney disputed the official reports.

Deputy Fire Chief Gerald Lane said the initial inspection report about three weeks before the shooting was inaccurate. He said the person completing the May 21 report checked the wrong box, resulting in the error.

The report released Tuesday showed box No. 7 checked: "Exit Door or Hardware Inoperable." In a second page, under comments, fire engineer Manuel Cintron wrote, "Doors are inoperable." A follow-up inspection was scheduled for July 1.

On Tuesday, Lane said the comment on the report was also wrong.

The fire engineer found two minor infractions — a fire extinguisher on the ground instead of hanging on the wall and one exit sign in need of a battery for back-up power — but no life or safety issues, Lane said.

Lane also said the text messages between Williams and Hughes about the door being blocked turned out to be not true.

A former city council member in Israel called the attack a "horrific crime." Words of support came from...

He said there were no fire code violations at Pulse nightclub when a gunman walked in and shot more than 100 people, killing 49 and injuring more than 50.

"The building was compliant with national standards, and we had no reason to believe there were any problems with the exits," Lane said.

In a statement, the attorney for Pulse said any allegation the exit door was blocked is "untrue."

"The club has six exit doors, which exceeds the applicable code requirements," Attorney Gus R. Benitez said in a statement. "None of those six exit doors were blocked."

Benitez also said the "lack of specificity and clarity in the fire department's report is "regretful."

City code would require two exits, according to OFD spokesperson Ashley Papagni. Papagni said the club had five exits.

OFD conducts regular "exit checks" to ensure businesses have the proper life-safety measures in place. After a review of fire records, there is no pattern of exits being blocked inside Pulse; this includes the most recent exit check conducted on May 21, according to the report.

Hughes said that although she saw photos of the machine blocking an exit, it is unclear whether the door was still blocked the night of the shooting.

Staff "will have to answer some tough questions," Hughes wrote in a text message.

A witness at the club, Selvin Dubon, said he had trouble exiting the building the night of the shooting. He said some of his friends said there was an exit blocked.

"It was like a wood door," he said. "So we went to the other exit and came out at a gas station." He survived, but two of his friends died.

It is unclear if the door was inoperable. Patrons told other media that he held a door closed out of fear and another door that was latched shut was opened by one of the security guards.

The last annual fire inspection was done Jan. 28, and no violations were found, Hughes wrote in an email.

On June 5, the Orlando Fire Department assigned a follow-up exit check for July 1.

After reviewing the timeline for inspection, Hughes wrote she had, "NO concerns about our practice at this time" because the follow-up appointments were scheduled within their normal processing window.

Other records released Tuesday include text messages to and from the Orlando police chief, fire chief and fire marshal; police and fire dispatch records; permitting records and a history of code enforcement inspections at the nightclub.

The city did not release recordings of 911 calls or any video from the club or responding officers' body cameras.

Information released so far has left some questions about the timeline of what happened the night of the massacre, as well as how officials handled the initial response.

Because of incorrect information in a public records report, a story on the front of Wednesday’s A-section about 911 calls and inspections linked to the Pulse nightclub shooting wrongly attributed comments about inoperable doors. Fire engineer Manuel Cintron wrote them.